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City: Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

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MELBOURNE is Australia's second-largest city, with a population of around three million - about half a million less than Sydney. Rivalry between the two cities - in every sphere from cricket to business - is on an almost childish level. In purely monetary terms, Sydney is now clearly in the ascendancy, having stolen a march on Melbourne as the nation's financial centre. The state government, led by Steve Bracks of the Labor Party, has continued the work of former premier Jeff Kennett, who tried and mostly succeeded in lifting the economy out of the doldrums in the 1990s, mainly by severe cutbacks or privatization of public services and of previously state-run utilities boards. While Kennett's fiscal puritanism definitely scored points by reducing public debt and improving the credit rating of the state, critics were quick to counter that out-sourcing or privatizing public services did not necessarily translate into greater efficiency and even more importantly that Victoria's economic growth has been achieved at a very high social cost - wealth is now more unevenly distributed, with increasing numbers of homeless people and drug addicts on the streets. In 1999, Kennett surprisingly lost the "unloseable election" to rank outsider Bracks, largely because his government neglected rural Victoria - Kennett once memorably described Melbourne as the vital heart of the state and rural towns as the "toenails" - but also because Kennett's election campaign focused almost entirely on his autocratic style of leadership, which proved a big turn-off for voters. Since seizing the reins of power, Steve Bracks has enjoyed a remarkably high standing in the polls, and his style is more inclusive and less confrontational than his predecessor. He has also concentrated his party's efforts on improving the key areas of health and education, as well as providing greater funding for rural areas.

However, Melburninans never tire of pointing out, in all modesty, that they have the incredible fortune to inhabit "one of the world's most liveable cities". Melbourne may lack a truly stunning natural setting or "in-your-face" sights, but with its subtle charms it is a city that grows on you, one that is undeniably a very pleasant place to live, and enjoyable to visit too. Magnificent landscaped gardens and parks in the English style provide green spaces near the centre, while beneath the skyscrapers of the Central Business District (CBD), an understorey of solid, Victorian-era facades ranged along tree-lined boulevards present the city on a more human scale. The air of approachability is further enhanced by the numerous arcades, lanes and alleyways in which are hidden some of the country's best cafAŠs, pubs and speciality shops.

An extensive and ambitious redevelopment programme, begun during Kennett's tenure, continues apace and has markedly changed the feel of the city - if only by the sheer magnitude of the projects. This new Melbourne for the millennium has meant a host of public buildings, as well as the new Federation Square by the Yarra just south of the CBD, were completed in 2001 to celebrate the centenary of the Australian federation, and the redevelopment of the Docklands precinct west of the CBD is planned for the next decade. From this area of unused docks and rotting old warehouses a brand new city will rise, complete with hotels, office and apartment buildings, department stores, marinas and other leisure facilities. This, if nothing else, will at long last put Ava Gardner's much cited - but erroneously so - remark from 1959 to rest. She came here to film On the Beach and reputedly summed up her impression: "It's a story about the end of the world, and Melbourne sure is the right place to film it." A great line, but in fact the celebrated swipe was coined by Melbourne journalist Neil Jillet.

Actually, change came to Melbourne way before the Nineties. Large-scale immigration since World War II has, in a sense, brought the world to Melbourne, shaking up the formerly self-absorbed, parochial WASP mindset for good. Whole villages have come here from Lebanon, Turkey, Vietnam and all over Europe, most especially from Greece, furnishing the well-worn statistic that Melbourne is the third-largest Greek city behind Athens and Thessaloniki. The European influence is perhaps most obvious in winter, as trams rattle past warm cafAŠs and bookshops, and promenaders dress stylishly against the chill. Not surprisingly, the immigrant blend has transformed the city into a foodie mecca, where tucking into a different cuisine each night - or new hybrids of East, West and South - is one of the great treats. Sport too, especially Australian Rules Football, is almost a religion here. The Melbourne Cup in November is a public holiday celebrated with gusto, and the city's collection of fine sporting venues are well used. Melbourne's strong claim to being the nation's cultural capital is well-founded: laced with a healthy dash of counterculture, Melbourne's artistic life flourishes, culminating in the highbrow Melbourne Festival in the last two weeks in October, and its slightly more offbeat (and shoestring) cousin, the Fringe Festival. The city also takes pride in its leading role in Australian literary life, based around the Writers' Festival in August. Throughout the year, there are heavyweight seasons of classical music and theatre, a wacky array of small galleries, and enough art-house movies to last a lifetime.

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Top Melbourne hotels

 

 


  SOUTHERN CROSS BOTANICA


| Rates from 156 to 275 AUD
| Address: 400 ST KILDA ROAD - MELBOURNE AUSTRALIA 3004


  CROWN PROMENADE HOTEL


| Rates from 159 to 547 
| Address: 8 WHITEMAN STREET SOUTHBANK - MELBOURNE VI 3006


  KNIGHTSBRIDGE APARTMENTS


| Rates from 103 to 104 
| Address: 101 GEORGE STREET


  Rialto Hotel on Collins


| Rates from 327 to 623 
| Address: 495 Collins Street - �


  The Hatton - Modern Boutique Hotel


| Rates from 139 to 173 
| Address: 65 Park Street - South Yarra


  EXPLORERS INN MELBOURNE


| Rates from 80 to 83 
| Address: 16 SPENCER STREET


  QUEST ON DORCAS


| Rates from 144 to 186 
| Address: 8 DORCAS STREET - SOUTH MELBOURNE VI 3205


  DARLING TOWERS EXECUTIVE APARTM


| Rates from 79 to 81 
| Address: 32 DARLING STREET


  EDEN ON THE PARK MELBOURNE


| Rates from 132 to 220 
| Address: 6 QUEENS ROAD


  Metro Apartments Melbourne


| Rates from 122 to 229 
| Address: 18-20 Bank Place - �


  Punt Hill Manhattan


| Rates from 132 to 152 
| Address: 57 Flinders Lane - �


  QUEST ON CHAPEL


| Rates from 144 to 247 
| Address: 651 CHAPEL ST SOUTH YARRA - MELBOURNE VI


  CLARION SUITES GATEWAY


| Rates from 159 to 911 AUD
| Address: 1 WILLIAM STREET - MELBOURNE VICTORIA 3000 AU


  QUEST ON WILLIAM


| Rates from 153 to 394 
| Address: 172 WILLIAM STREET


  Saville City Suites East Melbourne


| Rates from 163 to 183 
| Address: 133 Jolimont Road - �


  BW CITY PARK HOTEL


| Rates from 106 to 144 AUD
| Address: 308 310 KINGSWAY - S MELBOURNE VIC AU 3205


  THE HOTEL WINDSOR


| Rates from 164 to 1890 
| Address: 103 SPRING STREET


  Bayview On The Park


| Rates from 90 to 188 
| Address: 52 Queens Road - �


  BW CAUSEWAY INN ON THE MALL


| Rates from 112 to 132 AUD
| Address: 327 BOURKE STREET MALL - MELBOURNE VI 3000


  HOTEL CAUSEWAY


| Rates from 119 to 258 
| Address: 275 LITTLE COLLINS STREET


  THE VICTORIA ALL SEASONS HOTEL


| Rates from 93 to 206 
| Address: 215 LITTLE COLLINS STREET


  OAKFORD ON COLLINS STREET


| Rates from 106 to 231 
| Address: 182 COLLINS STREET


  QUEST FAIRFAX HOUSE


| Rates from 118 to 230 
| Address: 392 LITTLE COLLINS STREET


  Best Western Atlantis Hotel


| Rates from 88 to 129 
| Address: 300 Spencer Street - �


  BEST WESTERN CLUB LAVERTON


| Rates from 80 to 103 
| Address: 15 AVIATION ROAD LAVERTON - MELBOURNE VI 3028


  Easystay Carlisle St Apartments


| Rates from 103 to 104 
| Address: 62 Carlisle Street - �


  Adelphi Hotel


| Rates from 222 to 257 
| Address: 187 Flinders Lane - �


  Saville On Russell


| Rates from 158 to 185 
| Address: 222 Russell Street - �


  Vibe Hotel Carlton Melbourne


| Rates from 111 to 178 
| Address: 441 ROYAL PARADE - PARKVILLE VIC 3052


  Hotel Lindrum


| Rates from 192 to 192 
| Address: 26 Flinders Street - �


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